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Molecular Gels Materials with Self-Assembled Fibrillar Networks /

Molecular gels and fibrillar networks - a comprehensive guide to experiment and theory Molecular Gels: Materials with Self-Assembled Fibrillar Networks provides a comprehensive treatise on gelators, especially low molecular-mass gelators (LMOGs), and the properties of their gels. The structures and...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor Corporativo: SpringerLink (Online service)
Otros Autores: Weiss, Richard G. (Editor ), Terech, Pierre (Editor )
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer, 2006.
Edición:1st ed. 2006.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto Completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Materials-Chirality
  • Theory
  • Theory of Molecular Association and Thermoreversible Gelation
  • Growth and Chirality amplification in Helical Supramolecular Polymers
  • Self-Assembling Peptide Gels
  • Kinetics of Nucleation, Aggregation and Ageing
  • Soft Glassy Rheology
  • Rheological Chaos in Wormlike Micelles and Nematic Hydrodynamics
  • Wetting of Fibers
  • Techniques
  • Gel Formation: Phase Diagrams Using Tabletop Rheology and Calorimetry
  • Direct-Imaging and Freeze-Fracture Cryo-Transmission Electron Microscopy of Molecular Gels
  • Molecular Gels and Small-Angle Scattering
  • X-Ray Diffraction of Poorly Organized Systems and Molecular Gels
  • Optical Spectroscopic Methods as Tools to Investigate Gel Structures
  • Circular Dichroism for Studying Gel-Like Phases
  • Systems - Organogels
  • Low Molecular-Mass Organic Gelators
  • Design and Function of Low Molecular-Mass Organic Gelators (LMOGs) Bearing Steroid and Sugar Groups
  • Safin Gels with Amphiphilic Molecules
  • Systems - Hydrogels
  • Advances in Molecular Hydrogels
  • Aqueous Gels Made of Chiral Lipid- and Porphyrin-Amphiphiles
  • Analyses of Specific Systems
  • Rheology of Wormlike Micelles: Equilibrium Properties and Shear Banding Transitions
  • Cryo-Tem, X-Ray Diffraction and Modeling of an Organic Hydrogel
  • Gelation of a Liquid-Crystalline L? Phase Induced by the Proliferation of Topological Defects
  • Applications
  • Gels of Liquid Crystals and Ion-Conducting Fluids
  • Electron Conducting and Magneto-Sensitive Gels
  • Photoresponsive Gels
  • Gels of Low Molecular-Mass Organic Gelators as Templates for Transcription
  • Responsive Molecular Gels
  • Gels as Cleaning Agents in Cultural Heritage Conservation.